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Utility of intraindividual reaction time variability to predict white matter hyperintensities: a potential assessment tool for clinical contexts?

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Authors

Bunce, David
Bielak, Allison
Cherbuin, Nicolas
Batterham, Philip
Wen, Wei
Sachdev, Perminder Singh
Anstey, Kaarin

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Cambridge University Press
International Neuropsychological Society

Abstract

Intraindividual variability (IIV) refers to reaction time (RT) variation across the trials of a given cognitive task. Little research has contrasted different measures of IIV or assessed how many RT trials are required to provide a robust measure of the construct. We, therefore, investigated three measures of IIV (raw SD, coefficient of variation, and intraindividual SD statistically removing time-on-task effects) in relation to frontal white matter hyperintensities (obtained through structural MRI) in 415 cognitively normal community-dwelling adults aged 44 to 48 years. Results indicated the three IIV measures did not differ greatly in predictions of white matter hyperintensities, although it is possible that time-on-task effects were influential. As few as 20 trials taking approximately 52 s to administer provided a reliable prediction of frontal white matter hyperintensities. We conclude that future work should evaluate the comparative utility of different IIV measures in relation to persons exhibiting clear neuropathology.

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Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society 19.9 (2013): 971-976

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NOTE THIS WORK IS EMBARGOED UNTIL AUGUST 8, 2014